Qualification Type: | PhD |
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Location: | Birmingham |
Funding for: | UK Students, EU Students, International Students |
Funding amount: | Funded by BBSRC |
Hours: | Full Time |
Placed On: | 20th October 2025 |
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Closes: | 27th November 2025 |
A little bit of stress in life is inevitable, and can actually be positive and promote wellbeing, for example by prompting you into action and helping you to meet your deadline. Research has shown that moderate, short-lived stress can improve alertness and performance, and boost memory, by strengthening connections between neurons in the brain. However, when stress is prolonged, severe, or chronic, it may leave you feeling overwhelmed, burned out, and unable to cope, and may have a harmful impact on your health and wellbeing.
How do we know when we have reached the point that the positive effects of stress are turning into negative consequences? How much stress, and for how long, can we endure before we reach this counterpoint? Answering these questions has the potential to impact on the development of interventions to improve outcomes in stress related (mental) illnesses and establish the conditions in which such an intervention would be effective.
The ambition for this project is to use the vast amount of knowledge and methodologies on assessing stress to investigate the mechanisms pointing towards and underlying this counterpoint. The project will draw on the supervisors’ expertise in stress research and methods including biomarker assessment using blood, urine, saliva, and hair samples, structural and functional neuroimaging, and questionnaire and behavioural assessments. The project will bring a unique biopsychosocial perspective to the causal inference of stress on (mental) health and wellbeing.
Supervisors: Renate Reniers (r.l.e.p.reniers@bham.ac.uk).
Funding notes:
This is a PhD studentship with the Midlands Integrated Biosciences Training Partnership, funded by BBSRC and in partnership with the University of Warwick, Aston University, Harper Adams University, Coventry University, and the University of Leicester.
For more details please visit: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/mibtp/ or https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/about/college-of-life-and-environmental-sciences/midlands-integrative-biosciences-training-partnership
How to apply:
To apply, please follow this link, make an account, and submit an application via the university online admissions portal (via the above ‘Apply’ button). This link is unique to the MIBTP programme; please do not use any other link to apply to this project or your application may be rejected.
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